Bonds Residency
Three weeks & 17 gigs that shook up New York and America.

List of support acts

last updated 18 May 2006

Audio 1 - DAT master
Sound 4 - time 1hr 46mins - tracks 26
distant clear

White Man in Ham Palais

From audience DAT master.

The audience recording is from the DAT master and is not surprisingly very similar to others recorded by this remarkable taper. It is though a little more distant and flatter than most and its worst fault is that the sound quality drops down significantly on the encores.

This was the 15th concert of the Bonds residency and inevitably the repetitive nature of playing the same stage in the same city night after night took its toil. Whilst The Clash over the 17 Bonds shows never delivered less than a professional, powerful and enjoyable performance, there were some nights and this is one, where there is an evident lack of inspiration and real involvement from the band, (despite their equally evident efforts to prevent this). This coupled with the recording being a below average Bonds audience source makes this one of the least essential Bonds bootlegs to seek out.

'I saw the Clash at Bonds' - Facebook page

Popular Facebook group that recounts memories for the Bonds residency. Well worth a read.

The recording starts with Joe saying “Good evening and welcome” and the band kick into London Calling. There is very little variation in the set tonight, in fact its identical apart from the encores, to the previous nights. The performances are strong and enjoyable but there is a lack of inspiration; Joe says little and there are few adlibbed moments in the songs. By Safe European Home the very enthusiastic audience are roaring their approval. Mick draws out the start of The Leader toying with the intro and Joe sounds in good voice. There is a cheer of recognition for a fine Train in Vain, the States side audience pleaser.

Joe adlibs over the ending of the always-strong White Man in Hammersmith Palais, “Oh please mister just leave me alone” but the rest is unclear. He adlibs again over the ending of an extended Radio Clash; “…without Tom Snyder, calling Walter Cronkite!”

Spanish Bombs gives Mick another opportunity to demonstrate the proficiency and imagination of his guitar playing. The excellence of Mick’s guitar playing at Bonds is a consistent feature and his contribution on Guns of Brixton is very enjoyable too. The Call Up is fine but unexceptional and the audience clap and sing along to Bankrobber, played faster than the previous night’s slowed down version and with heavy echo added to Joe’s vocals.

An edit restarts presumably as Mick tunes up or changes guitars as Joe (on one of the few occasions tonight) engages with the audience. He says “…We’ve been studying old videos of the Grateful Dead to use in such a situation as this, two members of the band meditate with each other at the side of the stage! After the meditation is over” At which Mick cuts off Joe’s sarcastic story with the opening chords of Complete Control. Mick plays around with his solo and Topper’s powerful drumming stands out on another fine performance at Bonds of this 77 vintage classic. An edit mid song reprises a few seconds. “Strike” shouts Joe and he adlibs at the start of Lightning Strikes to get into the meter of the rhythm ”See you all when the lightning strikes, see you all when the baseball strikes, see you all when the transit strikes!”

Topper takes the spotlight next for Ivan Meets GI Joe which is followed by Charlie Don’t Surf which unusually tonight has less of the improvised Apocalypse Now soundtrack at the start, the band going straight into the melody line which Mick teases enjoyably around with. The live arrangement of Magnificent Seven is always a concert highlight and its another fine performance tonight.. Joe adlibs; “Searching through the city of New York looking for a little of that ole..” but again the sound quality is too distant to make out more.

Joe’s appropriate intro before Broadway is an update on his previous nights comments on the recent heavyweight bout “and now …Larry Holmes won in the third” It’s a fine performance as is Somebody Got Murdered where Mick improvises around the intro. Police and Thieves is fine but apart from an adlibbed “And it sure is hot in Kingston today” there is little other sign of inspiration. Clampdown as always now is a great finale to the main set; Joe’s few adlibs are unclear apart from “If I had a hammer I’d crush em”

An edit takes us in to the first encore but unfortunately the sound quality dips now through to the end. The sound is more distant and murky which is a shame as the encores (are again) some of the best performances of the gig. Mick adds more and more effects on One More Time, which has several tape dropouts. There is then a great adrenalin charge through Brand New Cadillac, Career Opportunities and Janie Jones with Joe in excellent intense vocal form. There are several tape wear dropouts on Janie Jones.

The audience are very enthusiastic and after an edit the band return for a hard, heavy Armagideon Time and a strong Jimmy Jazz but unusually on this song Joe does not come up with an adlibbed section; further sign of his tiredness and lack of inspiration tonight. The concert ends though in intense style as Joe screams New York’s Burning and the band tear through a scorching finale.

Did you go? What do you remember?
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I was lucky enough to see the Clash play twice--a great show at NYC's Palladium and one of their famous shows at Bonds. The latter show was a little lackluster, finally catching fire around halfway in--kicked off by a rousing version of Complete Control as I recall. One moment I remember clearly: a crew member put a small TV onstage so Mick Jones could watch the band perform on the Letterman show, pretaped earlier in the day. Joe Strummer was obviously annoyed at this, finally kicking the TV in. - Marlowe

As for greatest live bands well i saw the clash in nyc when they sold too many tickets for bonds in Times Square and were obliged to play something like 2 weeks straight to honour all the tickets sold. This was the sandinista tour but the show covered every period and was quite simplyamazing.

Strummer got visibly pissed off when the crowd did not sing along with the obvious anthems but then you can’t expect perfection from a rock audience.Support that night was funkapolitain and the slits which blew my mind as i had no idea they were on the bill. Pearl harbour was the dj between sets.

I've been a Clash fan for a very long time. I had tickets for all 8 of the original Bonds Performances. I was right up front opening night when the club was overpacked by double. Quite a few people passed out and had to lifted and surfed to the stage area to be removed. Bouncers were passing out jugs of water to the front.

If my memory serves me correctly, Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five were the very first opening act (4 or 5 per night) and they SUCKED! I told my friend who had been drinking a premixed bottle of vodka and orange jucie to chuck the bottle at the group (he did). It was then that the rappers went into a tyraid of "The Clash asked us to be here. They wanted us to perform". Though I love GF&TF5 they couldn't be any worse live. To be squeezed into a sardine can, and hear a pounding bass drum and nothing else was more than anyone should bear.

I LOVE Grandmaster Flash but they were AWFUL. As a matter of fact they were beyond awful. It wasn't racism, it was a matter of an overpacked house and a group that wasn't making music, it was barely noise. What would you call listening to a kick drum for 10 - 15 minutes?

Leaving, I literally couldn't stand up straight, there were fire marshalls at every door. SinceI had tickets for the original 8 nights bought at Bonds, my ticket was not valid the following evening. But, I saw 8 shows, and they were all fantastic. I saw them every tour since then, and they remain one of the greatest acts in R&R.

One night I was dying of thirst and Mick kept sipping from a large soda cup. So I kept looking at him and motioning for a drink (security would pass water to the crowd). Mick points to his cup and shakes his head no, but finally he gave in and it was RUM and a tiny drop of coke for flavor. I took a sip, passed it on and within a few seconds people were fighting over the cup.

There were a ton of opening acts at the Bonds shows, and none were memorable.

Snowman

“I had tickets for all 8 of the original Bonds Performances. I was right up front opening night when the club was overpacked by double. Quite a few people passed out and had to lifted and surfed to the stage area to be removed. Bouncers were passing out jugs of water to the front.

If my memory serves me correctly, Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five were the very first opening act (4 or 5 per night) and they SUCKED! I told my friend who had been drinking a premixed bottle of vodka and orange juice to chuck the bottle at the group (he did).

It was then that the rappers went into a tirade of "The Clash asked us to be here. They wanted us to perform". Though I love GF&TF5 they couldn't be any worse live. To be squeezed into a sardine can, and hear a pounding bass drum and nothing else was more than anyone should bear.

I LOVE Grandmaster Flash, and they were AWFUL. As a matter of fact they were beyond awful. It wasn't racism, it was a matter of an over packed house and a group that wasn't making music, it was barely noise. What would you call listening to a kick drum for 10 - 15 minutes? I saw them a few years later on Long Island where the levels were decent and you could understand what they rapped. It was great.

Leaving, I literally couldn't stand up straight; there were fire marshals at every door. Since I had tickets for the original 8 nights bought at Bonds, my ticket was not valid the following evening. But, I saw 8 shows, and they were all fantastic.”

David S

“Grandmaster Flash did open for the boys at Bonds. I was there and thought it was really closed-minded and small the way the crowd reacted. They wouldn't even give basic courtesy. Grandmaster Flash was right; the Clash did ask him to play, and frankly the reaction of a white crowd to an inner city act like that had to smack of racism.

Some reports have The Slits also on the bill on the 28th but it appears from the press review that they did not play this night.

The New York Nobody Sings- Clash at Bond's

reosted from my blog...

At 15, I saw the Clash at Bondís International Casino on Broadway and 44th street. The space was a beautiful disco with lots of playful elements. There was a big staircase...

Remember When - The Clash Photos at Bonds Casino – 80s Retro Punk Rock

So a few years later, when we got to do the printing for the official Clash at the Bonds Casino gig in NY City, we where ecstatic. We printed the shirts, drove them to NY City, sold them in the streets...

They Shoot Actors, Don't They? Bond's Casino

Facebook

The Clash at Bonds Casino, Times Square, NYC gigs 1-3 of 17.

IT'S ALL THE STREETS YOU CROSSED NOT SO LONG AGO -The Bow-Ties that Bond

BOND INTERNATIONAL CASINO--1530 Broadway, on the east side of Broadway between 44th and 45th Streets. (Often referred to as Bond's.) A short-lived discotheque most famous for hosting the "Clash on Broadway" residency in 1981,

Jo Streno

Personal memories

RETRO MEMORIES The Clash at Bonds Casino NYC, 1981

The Clash at Bonds Casino, Times Square, NYC gigs 1-3 of 17.

where you there?

Following their appearance at the Palladium in 1980 The Clash had refused to play in New York unless they could play in a venue they thought suitable, i.e. an unseated dance hall. In February, Bernie and Kosmo had come to New York to seek out a suitable venue and agreed on Bonds which seemed ideal; it could hold 4000 with minimal discomfort (fire exits would prove the problem) but it was comparatively intimate and had character (art deco interior.

History Of Bonds - includes write up and old photos

It was a former men’s department store with a lino floor and beams and a makeshift stage. Local promoters could not understand why The Clash did not play a couple of nights at Madison Square Garden (16,000 capacity) like everyone else. Indeed Chris Salewicz was asked to write a piece for Soho News “to find the story behind the story!”

Bonds was on Broadway as it enters Times Square, real Taxi Driver territory which must have appealed to the band who were great fans of the film. There is actually a clip of Bonds in the opening scenes in Taxi Driver. Indeed film fantasy actually crossed over into reality when Clash fan Scorcese invited the band to appear in his current project, Gangs of New York and write music for it.

J. Blocher writing in a fanzine gives an excellent description of the interior of Bonds and the experience of seeing The Clash there:

“The doors opened at 8pm, we went up a carpeted spiral staircase surrounded by barbed wire and Mooseheads. We went into a large lobby and bar, with Clash concession stands. Through a large bank of double doors we located the dance floor, strobing lights - stunning glow in the dark things, half inflated silver spacemen hanging through trap doors in the ceiling. The dance floor itself was huge with recessed balconies at 2 sides to handle the large number of techies apparently required to keep all the lights flashing and the mikes feeding back. The facilities at Bonds were dance or drop! There was absolutely no seating anywhere.”

In the photo below Bonds is the low building on the right.


Bonds as it is now

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London Calling
Safe European Home
The Leader
Trian in Vain
White Man in Ham Palais
Radio Clash
Spanish Bombs
Guns of Brixton
The Call Up
Bankrobber
Complete Control
Lightning Strikes
Ivan Meets GI joe
Charlie Dont Surf
Magnificent 7
Broadway
Somebody Got Murdered
Police and Thieves
Clampdown
One More Time
Brand New Cadilac
Career Opportunities
Janie Jones
Armagideon Time
Jimmy Jazz
New Yorks Burning

There are several sights that provide setlists but most mirror www.blackmarketclash.co.uk. They are worth checking.

from Setlist FM (cannot be relied on)

from Songkick (cannot be relied on)
... both have lists of people who say they went

& from the newer Concert Database

Also useful: Ultimate Music datbase, All Music, Clash books at DISCOGS

To read all the news reports from Bonds including video and audio chronologically in one thread.

1. Background

2. Bonds Residency

3. The Clash arriving in New York
and the build up

4. News Reports video and audio

5. The Ticket Fiasco

6. The remainder of the residency

7. History of Bonds
longer history of Bonds & images

8. Posters and adverts

9. Badges, FSLN hadouts, flyers, Clash
press release ...

10. Photos various - PDF 48mb

If you know of any articles or references for this particular gig, anything that is missing, please do let us know.

The Clash at Bonds

Italy to New York
When The Clash landed at JFK airport in New York on the night of the 25th May 1981 they had no idea that their residency at a Broadway nightclub would create such a furore and nationwide media coverage that it became a pivotal event in their assault on America, helping to propel them into the major league Stateside. As Kosmo Vinyl has succinctly put it, “People who didn’t have straight trousers and short hair suddenly knew who we were. It got out - it was big!”. The Bonds concerts became one of the most enduring aspects of the Clash legend. ... more ...

Arrival
A collection of articles covering the bands arrival into New York including previews of the week. Also includes the WNEW preview broacast with Meg Griffin.

Ticket Fiasco
Numerous articles and audio and video reports covering the ticket fiasco.

Bonds News Reports
Audio and video reports covering the ticket fiasco. Fascinating watching / listening that captures those three days well. Includes notes.

Residency
The remainder of the press coverage once the bad had agreed to ensure all ticket holders got in by adding 8 more dates.

Photos - PDF 42mb
All randon phonts bundled here.

Adverts, posters and sundry
Bits and pieces inclduying all adverts and posters.

Comments
Comments for those who attended one of the gigs

Italy to New York
When The Clash landed at JFK airport in New York on the night of the 25th May 1981 they had no idea that their residency at a Broadway nightclub would create such a furore and nationwide media coverage that it became a pivotal event in their assault on America, helping to propel them into the major league Stateside. As Kosmo Vinyl has succinctly put it, “People who didn’t have straight trousers and short hair suddenly knew who we were. It got out - it was big!”. The Bonds concerts became one of the most enduring aspects of the Clash legend

WNEW Bonds week

Prior to The Clash's arrival WNEW FM ran a Bonds Week with Meg Griffin. It includes an intro to the Clash at Bonds week with a montage of old interviews and Clash tracks

Listen again here:

Bonds News Reports

28 May - 30 May 81 - updated 5 Jan 2009When the probelms started on the 29th at the venue the news media decsended and there s both audio and video circulating that captures those few hectic days.Audio: 30 mins of TV and Radio interviews, news and commentary.

Video: The Clash - News Reports about Bond's Casino Shows - June 1981

Video - Clash on Broadway Reels -

"all the original reels have been found and are now with Sony. UPDATE1 The footage the footage that was found is very expensive to transfer. Don hasn't yet ID'd the film boxes (03/2015). UPDATE2 On the Facebook page dedicated to the summer 1981 Nyc residence, from one Kevin Bud Jones that was hired by Don Letts to help shout ing The Clash on Broadway docufilm:"We shot one complete show with multiple cameras and a 24 track mobile recorder. We also shot most of every show with one camera and in house 8 track recording. The band wore the same gear every night and Topper was such a consistent drummer - and the band well rehearsed - that we were able to build edits from different nights with no trouble at all."‬ (03/2015)"There are around 36 tapes in all, each of which would cost at least £500 per tape to transfer (the prohibitive cost is why the filmakers didn't have this material transferred at the time) - it's on a rare early video format called EIAJ. Sam

Facebook The same guy who posted that also wrote this in the comments (bold emphasis mine):

"We shot one complete show with multiple cameras and a 24 track mobile recorder. We also shot most of every show with one camera and in house 8 track recording. The band wore the same gear every night and Topper was such a consistent drummer - and the band well rehearsed - that we were able to build edits from different nights with no trouble at all." "Sadly - we never shot the opening acts. We started the gig with the intention of doing a six song DVD EP - not a full scale documentary. Shooting expanded as the story expanded and the shows stretched on."

"We were not making a concert movie per se - and my part in the post production ended when the material left the US after doing the Combat Rock video which John shot in Texas." All of this makes me wonder where all that footage is and why they haven't done a long form concert video or if they will at some point. I mean, a whole show in multi-camera, 24 track?! I can't imagine that kind of thing just inadvertently gets lost.

I'm sure there is way more about this that is known that I am not aware of. I think I've read that lots of footage has been lost but I don't know any details about that. Concert movies have been constructed from way less (The Doors Hollywood Bowl for one, I expect there are more).Found in London garage 2006 - handed to SonyThere are around 36 tapes in all, each of which would cost at least £500 per tape to transfer (the prohibitive cost is why we didn't have this material transferred at the time) - it's on a rare early video format called EIAJ. 

From - I saw the Clash at Bonds play at Bonds - Facebook page
My partner John Hazard and I were fortunate enough to be hired by Don Letts and The Clash to produce and shoot the documentary of Bonds and beyond that is the Clash on Broadway film featured at the end of Westway to the World. What started out as a one week shoot to get six songs live in the can became a year of our lives. The video for This Is Radio Clash was a lift from the 10 minute trailer for the unfinished film that we shot on 16mm and went all the way to a 35mm blowup to show potential distributors. Needless to say - the project was never completed as the band disassembled after Combat Rock. Clash on Broadway is the rough cut we had finished by the time to project was wrapped and went back to the UK.

We shot one complete show with multiple cameras and a 24 track mobile recorder. We also shot most of every show with one camera and in house 8 track recording. The band wore the same gear every night and Topper was such a consistent drummer - and the band well rehearsed - that we were able to build edits from different nights with no trouble at all.Sadly - we never shot the opening acts. We started the gig with the intention of doing a six song DVD EP - not a full scale documentary. Shooting expanded as the story expanded and the shows stretched on.Q. How come we've never seen the release of the entire show?

We were not making a concert movie per se - and my part in the post production ended when the material left the US after doing the Combat Rock video which John shot in Texas.

For all video, it is presumed that significant footage comes from the first night but it is also highly likely it came from other nights.

Clash On Broadway - 19:50
The Clash / Sound System box setIt is not clear which of these comes from which night?London Calling (first night?)
This Is Radio Clash (Tom Snyder show)
The Magnificent Seven (Tom Snyder show)
Guns Of Brixton (first night?)
Safe European Home (first night?)

A good listing of the contents of the The Clash's Sound System box set can be found here.

WNEW Bonds week

Prior to The Clash's arrival, WNEW FM ran a Bonds Week with Meg Griffin. It includes an intro to the Clash at Bonds week with a montage of old interviews and Clash tracks

Listen again here:

Bonds News Reports - 28 May - 30 May 81 - updated 5 Jan 2009

When the problems started on the 29th at the venue the news media decsended and there s both audio and video circulating that captures those few hectic days.Audio: 30 mins of TV and Radio interviews, news and commentary.

For full listing go here

Video: The Clash - News Reports about Bond's Casino Shows - June 1981

Video - Clash on Broadway Reels -

For a full details on video from the opening shows go to the 28th

For information on the Clash on Broadway reels go here

Private Super8mm film footage of the rucus outside Bonds
Someone had a video camera aand has more and better footage from outside.

Press Conference - "See out"
Would like the full press conference.

Video from Bonds

1. Essential Clash DVD
cut down version of CoB from Westway but with unseeen angles and clips. Includes an edited London Calling [audio is unmixed pro recording from 9th].

2. Westway to the World BONUS footage DVD
Includes nearly full tracks of - London Calling [Trick of Treat audio] - Guns of Brixton [dubbed partly] Safe European Home [dubbed with studio single] - Charlie Don't Surf [original sound but from mixing desk] - Radio Clash [original sound but from mixing desk]. Also includes a mash up of a lot of footage from New York and outside Bonds such as the riot.

3. video - press conference, backstage, 16 Tons play on, London Calling nearly full [probably the same length as Westway? but the sound plays on to a montage of NYC/Clash pictures]. The sound is remixed from [Trick or Treat bootleg] radio broadcast from the 9th June as Westway. 5.38min

4. MTV Rockumentary is same as Westway/Clash on TV/Essential DVD but with only very edited clips of the press conference and London Calling. Nothing new except a couple of comments form Mick and Paul.

Tom Snyder show NTV

The complete Clash appearance circulates on Clash On TV Vol.1 in very good quality (apart from some ghosting) from a TV rebroadcast (better than the YouTube broadcast below). For many years Clash fans had made do with very poor quality video copies of this important Clash footage.

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